Monthly ArchiveMay 2009



Really Living 26 May 2009 01:17 pm

I dont know what to say.

That’s the truth of What Is.

Last week I took my babies to the ocean and we body surfed in waves that were more caribbean than North Florida. Sunlight glinted, causing us to shut our eyes tight to more than just splashing salt water. And in one of those waves, in a moment of utter contentment and happiness, I finally decided to stop posting on this blog. It was just like that: a wave came, I let my body glide along with it, the two of us moved together a little closer to shore, babies laughed and called to each other, sunshine warmed us, and when I stood up, I knew I was ready to close a door.

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This blog documents a lot of history. In many ways I was a different person than the me I am now when I first started writing here. The texture of my family most certainly was different. Our environment was one that will never exist in that form again.  Since the axis point of our life change I have debated how long I would continue here; many, many days the energy here has not seemed to fit. It’s been restrictive and I don’t feel the freedom to express. But so much change happened at one time and it was necessary not to let everything go at once.

I’m ready to turn the key in new locks. I’m ready for new walls and new folders and fresh air.  For awhile I thought I could accomplish the same feeling with different paint. But the feng shui was off and the past year and a half has shown me that no matter the arrangement of things, what I have to say and express would leave wrists and ankles hanging bare. It’s just constricting. Not that the things I talk about or want to share are really all that different…but it seems time to say them in a different room.

I thought the new place would need to feel very open to possibility. My life right now is still gypsie-like, with only a few hard and fast parameters. I have to bend and flex daily like no other time in my life and have a very open mind to evolving visions and destinations. There isn’t a lot of space for locked in philosophies or ideologies and I don’t feel like the voice to promote one of those anyway. Life is made of moments and of very earnest people just taking those moments and making of them what they can. No boxes, no pattern pieces stamping us all out in a row.

One of my favorite things about my “new” life is that the incredible variety of people I now come into contact with. Part of that is the power of the internet and of running an online business. But it happens in person too. It’s an amazing high to meet someone from an entirely different background and demographic and find common ground. And most of the time that commonality is over small things we each savor in the midst of our very different journeys.

I wanted the new space to embrace that. I wanted to convey the happy moments that surface even in the midst of the frenzied pace most of my days carry. I’ve got a lot on the menu and I know most everyone else does too. Sometimes, when I’m pushing through to make it to the next thing, I put in one earbud and turn on my ipod and sing. To no one but me. And it probably looks odd, especially when I stop at a traffic light and my windows are down because my van AC doesn’t work. I’m sure I seem “touched” by the heat and a little off kilter. But it always works. By the end of whatever song I was in the mood for, I found enough strength to quit obsessing about my worries and my depleted stamina and to keep going.

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So the new site is called www.singingtomyself.com. I’m sure I’ll write there but for now it’s mostly photo moments; snapshots of what gives me a happiness shot in the arm. Things are a little bare and plain over there right now and that’s just what I want. Air. Light. Open possibilities.  This site will remain up; gratefully the archives still prove helpful to readers just finding a response to a few things they were searching for. I’m lucky to have been where I have been and blessed anyone read what I wrote along the way. Like any book with chapters, it’s time to turn the page.

Really Living & books 03 May 2009 04:00 pm

Rx For Peace & Progress: Take Two Of These And Call Me In The Morning.

When I was a little girl, laying on a blanket on the grass, looking up counting clouds, I don’t remember ever saying, “When I grow up I want to be lonely”. On the contrary, my earliest memory of growing-up dreams went like this: “When I grow up I want to have 5 children.” My childhood play included muddy baby dolls and tee pees in the woods or dollhouse homesteads with multitudes of barefooted chillin’s running around. I thought the daddy would be my best friend and we would live in ordinary domestic bliss forever.

Life kind of turned out like that. I had the five babies. They were even muddy and barefooted most of the time! Truth be told, lots of times they still are. I’ve even come pretty close to an actual homestead. What little girls don’t realize (and its probably a mercy to them) is that the reality of dreams that come true have a lot of other stuff that comes with them. Like the fact that I’ve had 5 babies but only get to raise 4, having buried one when she was born with a broken heart. Or that sometimes the man you thought was Prince Charming turns into a mean toad at night, turning your humble little castle into a haunted homestead of illusion. Life is like that; sugar comes with lumps.

When dreams break and there are pieces to pick up, lots of the daily rituals that existed are gone. The cast of characters changes.  Basics like eating and sleeping are thrown off kilter. People worry less if the externals look the same for as long as possible…you know, if you still show up for work on time, have the same party you always did, come to church and sit in a neat row. So maybe a lot of energy goes to those things, just to avoid dealing with both the tragedy and the disruption caused for others. But one thing is definite: people love to give advice. I think it makes them feel like they’ve done something to help when the problem seems too big for anyone to fix. And another thing can be counted on, at least most of the time: that advice worked for them or someone they knew so they’re sure it will work for you too.

It’s well meant. Very much so and it always helps to keep that in mind. There have been two really big traumas in my life that have resulted in a constant tide of lovingly-meant advice. The first was after my Clara died. The second was after I left that abusive marriage and said out loud that I gave up.

When Clara died, it was all “stay busy” kind of stuff. For some reason, it seems grieving people shouldn’t be allowed to have too much time on their hands. Makes them dwell on the pain too much maybe. What I hated most then about those days was how easily the world kept on turning when I wanted it to stop for a second and acknowledge her existence. I hated busy-ness. I hated having Things To Do. I wanted to crawl into my lonely nursery, paint her picture for hours, tend her grave, hold my toddlers, and give the whole process it’s appointed time.

This was very different from how I’d coped with anything else. Extreme financial pressure, major disappointments, emotional despair…these were all met with hard work. Lots of hard work. I throw myself into projects when I need to push through something. Take no breaks. A task at a time, I stay too busy to think. So when I put on the breaks that May, I gave myself over to it fully but it was counter to everyone’s prescription. Maybe it’s like when someone is pushing on you and instead of pushing back, you drop your arms and let their own force make them fall.  I knew in my heart when the time was right to Come Back.  I washed her clothes and put them away. I got the nursery ready for the next baby and willed myself to dream of him whole. I started listening to life again. And I learned in vivid color that this “time”, this turning point, is different for everyone. No one can appoint it for any one else.

The end of marriage though was the total opposite. Now the idea was “you need time alone”. I have the unfortunate (for this story) historical note of having gotten married too young. I married a year after high school and lived at my parent’s home until I moved into “Our” first apartment. In most of the world, this is normal. In America, this Bad News.

So, when you do that, and it goes badly, it’s assumed at least part of the problem was that she wasn’t independent enough.  Really, it’s another way to make him less responsible. Go with me here for a second: There’s a persistant attitude regarding abused women that part of them likes it or they wouldn’t stay. Or maybe part of it is that they are too stupid/naive/young etc to notice the signs. Whatever. The crux is that this puts the responsiblity of the abuse ON HER. Nevermind that men shouldn’t abuse their women. That there shouldn’t BE signs to recognize because EVEN IF she’s stupid/naive/young, men don’t have the lisense to beat her head into the wall because dinner was late or the kitchen floor needs to be mopped.

I don’t think anyone who has spoken to me directly has thought his abuse was my fault. Not in so many words. But when they say it happened because I was too young or it happened because I didn’t have enough time on my own first, that’s missing the mark. It happened because HE. Not, It happened because SHE. Get the nuance?

So anyway, I didn’t live alone before I got married. And after I left, I went back to my parent’s house, which became more lengthy than anyone intended. Legal issues are complicated and after he was committed, a physcologist was added into the mix. You can’t rent an apartment if you can’t change your legal residence. So, we lived where we were told to live, poster children for the fact that idyllic solutions can’t be slapped on situations so far from any kind of ideal.

And somewhere in the mix of the time since then, surfaced this idea that I might be afraid to be alone. Or I might not know how. Or, if I can just somehow manage it, it will make everything better.

Well-meant, constant advice.  Any writers reading this are probably laughing… writers and other creatives know that time alone inevitably fills with words, images, and ideas faster than you slap a tick. More content is generated than can be expressed in a lifetime; the feeling being there is never enough time to get it all “done”. It’s something craved, not feared. I can’t remember the last time I was bored, felt afraid of silence, or couldn’t find something to do.  Nevertheless, when relational crisis happens, the universal advice is “you just need some time alone”.

The “work” that often has to be done, is different for everyone. For some, they have never known solitude and their biggest work is learning how to be alone with the quiet. For others, who’ve had too much time alone, their biggest work may be learning to how to dwell within community, or at least, a different community. To say one size fits all is to say we must all be hermit monastics or that there is a magic number prescription that is if swallowed, will make the rest of life go down more easily. To be sure, breaking old patterns and learning new ones, opening life up to light, and choosing health over toxicity will all make the new life better than the old one. But if this came in a bottle or in a clearly defined checklist we all could adopt, it’d be a Brave New World indeed.

I knew where my work needed doing. There are a few general “givens” that I didn’t waste time questioning. For instance, therapy always helps. Anyone. At any time. Got a problem? Go talk to someone. It’s guaranteed to help and probably in ways you wouldn’t have predicted. It’s transformative like that.  Another is to analyze what steps occurred that led to the previous choice and design some kind of map of opposites so that it’s not possible to choose that way a second time. Want different people in your life? They probably hang out in different places than the others. And they have different hobbies. You might have to learn something new, which happens to be pretty interesting and transformative all on it’s own. All that “stepping out of your comfort zone” stuff grows a person. If you spent years burying your own preferences, the process of uncovering them becomes it’s own adventure. Back it way up baby; go back to the start. Remembering what you liked and what’s been added to it in your absence is seeing new skin on your finger after a week or so under a band aid. Everything feels really fresh again, even if it’s actually quite old. It’s you that’s been changed.

Having the kind of childhood I did, with all that time in the woods, making “friends” with trees and ideas, gave me lots of time alone. Being a creative person, who paints and writes, taught me how to fill available solitude with texture. Being married to who the person I was, taught me how to work hard within the the context of emotional isolation, in the absence of camaraderie. Walking away from every tangible thing I knew, small children in tow, through a dangerous Leaving and towards an uncertain future certainly taught me how to be strong for others even as the world around me crumbles. It definitely conquered any fear of doing it alone!  Learning how to be alone is not something I need more practice doing. As I lay dying, I won’t think back and wish I’d had more time alone. I won’t wish I’d spent more time reading interesting books or trying  a new painting technique, though I like to do both of those things. Someone said to me last week that what those telling someone “you need to be alone” don’t realize is that what they are saying alienates the person they are saying it to.  This ultimately drives them away, to go be with someone else rather than “alone”.  People, like legos, really don’t make a whole lot of sense without the context of one another.

Transformation doesn’t have to have a cocoon or bubble in order to occur. In fact, I think I’m starting to believe that it rarely does. I will include the deeply spiritual practices of intentionally sequestered time for mediation and prayer. By it’s very nature, the discipline of prayer includes addressing someone, a higher power, something bigger than ourselves. Even prayer does not happen “alone”, though it does happen in quiet.

It might be more convincing that it works if it seemed anyone really did it. I know people who decided not to date after a break up for a long time…but they live very active social lives. Or online lives. Or that blurry place inbetween. There are people who maintain a private mailing address and call this “alone”, even though their hours aren’t spent that way. Others don’t tell their friends and families who is in their lives and call this “alone”. I’ve heard people say with regret (because they didn’t do it) that “you need to be alone”…only because in hindsight they wish they’d done things differently and pick needing companionship as the weakness they’d most like to purge.

As if the ability not to need people makes them super heroes. The only thing it makes them sound like to me is less human.

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I think that’s ironic. Why is wanting to be in the presence of a friend considered a weakness? It’s a universal human desire, one of such magnitude that God said it was not good for man to be alone so He made him a woman. Humans need food, water, shelter, to love and be loved. We die without those things. And yes, I get that we all die anyway but if we were given a life to live for a time I don’t see the point in wasting the hours. We get ONE life and it’s later than we think. If there is work to be done after a crisis, I’d rather do it fully and then get on with living. Which is to say, I don’t want to spend my one little lifetime sorting through emotional trauma and the fallout. There’s so much more to real living than that.

If I’ve learned anything in my suffering it’s that everyone has it. Everyone knows pain and struggle. We are all valid. What we are not is all the same. What might heal you is not necessarily what will heal me. My remedy could be your poison. If I walk with you, I will know this. If I hand you a platitude and walk away, I will not. People need people, a hand to hold, a hug, room to be. Fortunately, the world is a big place full of people. If one tribe won’t commune, there’s another that needs you. In this one life we get, we can touch as many as we wish. When I read that quote last week, “it’s later than we think”, it stuck with me. There’s no time like now; it’s the only time we have.